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      Modelling horses for novel climate courses: insights from projecting potential distributions of native and alien Australian acacias with correlative and mechanistic models : Modelling Australian acacias

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          A high-resolution data set of surface climate over global land areas

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            ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Predicting species distributions from small numbers of occurrence records: a test case using cryptic geckos in Madagascar

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              Niches and distributional areas: concepts, methods, and assumptions.

              Estimating actual and potential areas of distribution of species via ecological niche modeling has become a very active field of research, yet important conceptual issues in this field remain confused. We argue that conceptual clarity is enhanced by adopting restricted definitions of "niche" that enable operational definitions of basic concepts like fundamental, potential, and realized niches and potential and actual distributional areas. We apply these definitions to the question of niche conservatism, addressing what it is that is conserved and showing with a quantitative example how niche change can be measured. In this example, we display the extremely irregular structure of niche space, arguing that it is an important factor in understanding niche evolution. Many cases of apparently successful models of distributions ignore biotic factors: we suggest explanations to account for this paradox. Finally, relating the probability of observing a species to ecological factors, we address the issue of what objects are actually calculated by different niche modeling algorithms and stress the fact that methods that use only presence data calculate very different quantities than methods that use absence data. We conclude that the results of niche modeling exercises can be interpreted much better if the ecological and mathematical assumptions of the modeling process are made explicit.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Diversity and Distributions
                Wiley-Blackwell
                13669516
                September 2011
                September 2011
                : 17
                : 5
                : 978-1000
                Article
                10.1111/j.1472-4642.2011.00811.x
                290dd0fb-a0f4-4fdc-acd6-73a61e2305d0
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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